We Can Do Hard Things with Glennon Doyle - How to Follow the Wisdom of Your Body with Dr. Hillary McBride
Episode Date: May 9, 2023Embodiment teacher, Dr. Hillary McBride, joins us to discuss: what embodiment and disembodiment are; dissociation as survival response, somatophobia, and how to get more comfortable with fear. She off...ers concrete practices to stop blaming our bodies, and help us become attuned to our body’s messages.  If you haven’t listened to Glennon’s latest episodes about her recovery journey and embodiment, check them out here: Episode 199 Why Glennon Says We Should All Be In Recovery and Episode 200 Don’t Tell Glennon to Love Her Body. CW: eating disorders About Dr. McBride: Dr. Hillary McBride is a Registered Psychologist, researcher, podcaster, author, and speaker, but she identifies most with being a mother. She has lived experience and clinical expertise in the areas of trauma, embodiment, eating disorders, and the intersection of spirituality and mental health. Her research has focused on women's relationships with their bodies across the lifespan, and her books include: Mothers, Daughters, and Body Image; Embodiment and Eating Disorders, and the bestseller The Wisdom of Your Body. Her next book – Practices for Embodied Living – will be released in 2024. Her CBC podcast Other People's Problems was listed in the New York Times and Wall Street Journal as essential listening. TW: @hillarylmcbride IG: @hillaryliannamcbride To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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And to be loved we need to be known.
You know I was reading My grandmother's hands by Resma Menachem and he said that all of
his degrees and all of that but he thinks the number one reason people come to his office
is to sit with someone with a regulated nervous system.
Wow.
Yeah.
So, I believe it.
Yeah.
Welcome to We Can Do Her Things.
Sure.
Our goal for you today is that you get a regulated nervous system during this next hour.
We are here with Dr. Hillary McBride.
If you don't know her already,
you're going to want to have her in your life.
She's just a leading thinker about embodiment.
And for me on my journey, she's been really important.
Dr. Hillary McBride is a registered psychologist,
researcher, podcaster, author, and speaker, but she identifies most
with being a mother.
She has lived experience and clinical expertise
in the areas of trauma, embodiment, eating disorders,
and the intersection of spirituality and mental health.
Her research has focused on women's relationships
with their bodies across the lifespan,
and her books include mothers, daughters, and body image, embodiment, Eating Disorders, and the best seller, the wisdom of your body.
Her next book, Practices for Embodied Living, will be released in 2024,
and her CBC podcast, Other People's Problems, was listed in the New York Times in Wall Street
Journal as essential listening. Dr. Hillary McBride, thank you so much for being with us today.
I wouldn't want to be anywhere else right now.
I'm so delighted to be with you.
Thank you for having me.
I would love it if you would call me Hillary.
Oh, that would feel so good.
I would just love to be human.
Okay, human person.
Okay, well, I have honorary doctorate,
so you guys can all refer to me as Dr. Womba.
Yes, yes, yes. And I. Womba. Yes, yes, yes.
And I prefer Miss Doyle.
Yes, yes.
No, Hillary, amazing.
Okay, Hillary, that's exactly what we're going to do.
I have often wondered what the hell this embodiment thing is that has come into just the average
person's lexicon lately. And I heard you say that embodiment
is reclaiming the body as the central place where we experience life. And that really
helped me to understand what it is that we were talking about. And so I wondered if we
could just start from a place of you talking a little bit more about what embodiment and disembodiment is. Yes. Oh gosh, it is so hard to do this without also wanting to talk
about my kind of personal sensory encounter with embodiment. So I'm wondering if maybe it would be
okay to start there and then I can fill it in kind of more
Yeah, with more technical language and how we understand it empirically. I
Had been in eating disorder recovery. I would call myself a frequent flyer At that point I was like in and out of treatment and most of what was happening in treatment was I was getting better tips about how to
Increase my symptoms and then kind of get out of the hospital.
And then really kind of dig deeper into my eating disorder.
And this was like a last-ditch effort really on the part of my parents.
And I was in this outpatient treatment program with this woman.
And most of our work together focused on consciousness raising around the stories of what it means
to be a body in our cultural context. We didn't talk about
my weight, we didn't talk about my nutrition plan, we didn't talk about kind of the behaviors
that were going along with the eating disorder we talked about what it meant to be human.
And over the course of our work, she would reflect back to me occasionally. Do you notice how you're
sitting in the chair right now? Just bring your awareness
back to how it is that you are taking up space right now. And she did this on one particular occasion
where I was showing up differently. I could feel myself spilling over the edges of the cushions,
the armchair cushions. I could feel my leg kind of one curled under the other. And she brought
my attention to my body and said,
do you notice how you are showing up in the space right now?
And I remember sort of getting what she was saying,
but also not.
And she said, let me show you.
Let me show you what it was like when you first came into treatment.
And she pulled her legs up,
close to her chest and wrapped her arms around her knees, contorting herself,
really, to the smallest possible amount of space that she could take up. And she said,
this is actually how you sat when you first came into treatment. And I remember in that moment,
it felt like there was a balloon that I pinched at my neck. And all of my consciousness was living in my head.
And in that moment, the fingers that were pinching
the bottom of the balloon released
and all of a sudden my conscious awareness started
to flow into my body.
And I remembered I had arms.
I remembered I had legs.
And I remember in that moment, it was so striking to me.
I remember I had a foot because my foot had fallen asleep
as it was kind of like pinched under my hip
or however it was arranged.
And it felt like in that moment,
I understood that my selfness existed not just in my mind,
but through all of me.
And as someone who had been living in the world intentionally trying to erase
and make my body disappear, to remember I had a body and that it could be safe to be a body
that actually that my, my self-ness spanned so much more than this, like tiny little bit of
cranial tissue that is responsible for our organized conscious thoughts.
Like there was more of me, I had density, I had dimensionality.
It felt like all of a sudden I came alive again.
And of course, I'm highlighting that singular moment and there were many others from that
point on.
But to me, that experience of remembering that I was a body, not just that I was a mind
that had a body, was the beginning
of changing everything. And it took me from feeling like I was performing recovery and adhering
to the performance of recovery that was expected of me by people outside of me. Right, here's just
another script of who you're supposed to be in recovery. Right, here's just, you can't trust yourself,
eat what we tell you. That's right.
There's something about eating disorder recovery for me
that was so much about realizing I'd switched systems
of bodily control from cultural discourse to medical discourse.
And in that moment, I remembered myself.
I remembered myself.
I think that really highlights the the operational
definition of embodiment that I like to use the most, which is the subjective
experience of being a self as a body engaging with the world. And whenever we
look at embodiment, we look at it as having multiple dimensions, but two kind of
directions to it. The first would be, I am a body, not just I am a mind that has a body, but that experience
of being a body is actually in a dialectic with the world around me. That my experience
of being a body is shaped by how power is conferred, who gets access to space, what is considered
valuable, which experiences I have learned are safe or unsafe for me as
the lift body that I am, but it is always this kind of bi-directional process of a dialogue
between my physicality, my sensory development, and my experience, and what culture says
about what is good, what culture says about what is valuable? And so we can see embodiment is having a variety of qualities to it.
We know that there is actually continuum. So embodiment is something
that we all are experiencing all the time.
But you could be on the continuum of embodiment where your experience of being a body is pretty
dissociated and disembodied, right? Your experience of being a body is pretty dissociated and disembodied, right?
Your experience of being a body is that you experience your body as a thing.
You experience your body as an object that you carry around, that you manage,
that you negotiate about value around.
And then we have the other end of the spectrum, which is what we might consider these experiences of positive embodiment, which have to do with attunement and agency, really desire, voice,
the ability to say, I am the place, I am the place of my subjectivity,
right? Agency exists in my sensory self that I am,
I am just as much my fingertips as I am the thoughts that I have about them.
And that experience of being in positive embodiment doesn't necessarily mean that we are immune
or notculated against the social discourse, but perhaps we know how to locate ourselves
in response to it, or we know that agency also lives in us.
Or we know that we can leave certain social spaces where our body is considered less than
and we can go and find social spaces where our body is considered treasured and valuable
and worth protecting.
And so having a positive embodiment doesn't mean that you always perfectly have these,
you know, really loving, nurturing thoughts.
In fact, most of the time, what I would argue
positive and body men is, is just accurate at a two-minute.
I'm hungry, I feed myself, I'm tired, I go to sleep.
Film will be nervous before this.
I danced the hell out of this office
because I was like, gotta get that energy out, right?
Like that to me was an experience of a positive
and body men, not necessarily like,
I am the most beautiful person
in the world. Whatever the thing is. I'm so grateful for this approach because as someone
who has certainly platinum status on the frequent flyer, feeding the sort of. Then 46. I've been in some, oh, I'm 47.
I've been in some sort of
didn't have treatment since for 37 years.
And I don't know. I also, I have a gift for only hearing what I want to hear.
So if anyone's mentioned a body meant to me
before the last year, I didn't hear it.
My entire recovery has been about body image.
So what I want to explain about that is it has felt my entire life like I end up in
some office somewhere with some book trying to get some perspective on eating disorder stuff.
I feel like I'm going to an office and saying, I'm afraid of falling off a cliff.
Like my life has become an angel
because I'm so afraid of falling off a cliff.
And whoever the expert is across from me
says, oh, it's okay.
Let's look at some cliffs.
Look at this cliff.
Look at the shape of this cliff.
All cliffs are beautiful.
Just to stop being so scared of cliffs.
And I'm like, that's, it's not about the cliff,
it's about the process of falling that I'm afraid of.
So for me, it's always been like,
I'm not worried about the shape necessarily of my body.
I feel uncertain about this whole idea of living in a body on this earth, of being in a body.
So if I am a person who is on some spectrum of so muchophobia, is that how we say it?
Sure.
Okay.
So the fear of having a body.
If I am a person who is in a female body, in a trans body, in a disabled body, in a brown
or black body, in any of these bodies that have been threatened since the beginning of
time, is it a good idea for me to be at peace and feel safe in my body when historically
I should not feel safe in my body?
Living on this planet in any of these bodies is a precarious, if not deadly situation, all the time.
So should I just have moments of dancing?
I shouldn't just be walking around the streets feeling embodied, right?
Because it's fear necessary in certain bodies on the planet.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, I'm still glad that you circled back to that because I think where I would go back
to that metaphor that you're using of the anxiety, kind of the fear, the cliff, the falling
is not actually to start even with the process of the falling, but to look at how scary it
is to be on the edge of the cliff.
And I think what I would want to do is say, can we learn to be okay with how scary it is
right here, right now, as we are on the edge of the cliff and can we feel that together?
I'm not going to ask you to jump. I think that your system will actually be ready to jump when
your system is ready to jump. And I think I'm going to hold your hand the whole way down.
But right now, what I know is that you are on the edge and it feels terrifying and nobody has likely taught you that that can be a thing that you feel and can be okay in. Sometimes the
thing that we actually need is to learn how to be okay with the fear that is an appropriate
response to the constant threat that we have around us and instead of numbing and avoiding
the fear and dissociating from our body is if our body is
telling a lie, what we need to do is say that our body is telling the truth about these really messed-up
situations that we're in and instead of betraying ourselves, how do we learn how to be in relationship
with the fear that also brings us into our lives? Because I think that there can be a response that we
have to fear which is avoidant and inhibitory and takes us out of our lives or out of connection. And actually, what we
really need to do is learn how to be in the fear. What do we do when fear is in our body? And I
would argue that it could be actually like fairly dissociative as a response disembodying to inhibit
the fear response
that is appropriate.
And actually what we need to do is learn how to see
that our fear might be telling the truth
and learn how to be in relationship with it.
And it is only when we can be experiencing fear
and trust that it has some useful information for us.
That safety, actual safety is actually only an option when we have
been able to experience fear and nobody won't end us.
A very oversimplified version of all that is like, if you're the body standing on the cliff, looking over and being scared.
Your mind is essentially victim blaming your body
by being like, I do not, this is not cool.
I'm going as far away from you as possible
because you are in a precarious situation
and that is no good as opposed to unifying with your body
and being like, it is correct to be scared.
What is to blame?
Is this scary as cliff?
And I am with you in it and we are a team.
But I'm not blaming you for having the appropriate reaction
to this, but when you can't control the cliff,
it's easier to blame the body.
Yeah, that's good.
Absolutely.
And that's good. Absolutely.
And that's the paradigm of disembodiment that we live in is always blame the body.
Always blame the body.
Until we're hearing that from people closest to us and society and culture at large,
it's in our religious ideology, it's in the fabric of the way that we manage emotions.
And so it's really, really hard to do anything but that.
It's really baked into us culturally.
I'm Jonathan M. Hevar.
I'm a podcast producer and someone who likes fancy things. But I grew up working class.
My parents were immigrants with factory jobs.
And because of that, I think about class a lot.
And I want to talk about it.
That's what we're doing on my new podcast, Classy.
And what did you all eat?
You know, trailer food.
I was like, Girl, why not doing that anymore?
You'll hear from people who told me awkward, embarrassing,
and strangely intimate things about what class means to them.
She said, you know, for the house cleaner,
I hide the tag on the $6 bread.
And I just thought, don't you think she knows that you're wealthy?
You're hiding the tags from yourself. Classy. A new podcast from Pineapple Street Studios.
Available now. Wherever you get your podcasts.
Why do we hate the body so much?
Like how do we get here?
What are all the ways we start cutting off the body and decide to live in the head?
Like how did this happen to all of us?
Because it's not just eating disorder people.
It was really important to me that this episode is for everybody.
Like literally everybody, many of us are on the spectrum of disembodiment and all of us have more life to live
if we can be embodied more. So first, how did we get in this mess?
Yeah, I could look kind of big picture and tell you about the history of philosophy and how we
are handed these ideas about how the body is bad and the spirit is good and get away from the body
and be in the spirit because you've got a whole road ahead of you. If you and the spirit is good and get away from the body and be in the
spirit because you've got a whole road ahead of you. If you're the spirit, you never die. Isn't that great
when dying is terrifying and being a body is full of all of these mysterious ailments and the
experience of suffering? Like here's the get out of jail free card essentially. Move into your head
and then you never have to experience the challenges of being here,
right? Of being a body and we can see that as being shaped by discourse around theology
and philosophy from Plato to Descartes and all the way right into the present moment when we look
at objectification theory and the use of media and really selling bodies as a way
of selling products, the commodification of the body, particularly the female body.
So there's like that whole history, but I think where it really comes down to, for most
of us, is these really early experiences that we have of our bodily knowings being denied. And what I mean by that is a kid being told,
no, you're not feeling that.
I'm hungry, no, you're not.
I have to go to the bathroom, no, you don't.
These experiences that we have as children
where the adults in our life who we are dependent on
for our survival needs really start to make us doubt the things that we know intuitively,
internally.
And so I think that there's something that most of us have experienced, whether it was
really, really early on or later on, where we had an instinctual bodily knowing emerge,
and we were experiencing the conflict of do I preserve the relationship that I'm in or do I stay connected to myself?
Is it going to cost me connection if I pay attention to what's happening inside or will I be able to be in relationship with the people that I want to be in relationship even if I'm connected to what my body is saying. This is bringing up a story that I had. I was sitting in the back seat of my parents' car
as in the middle seat,
because I'm the youngest child in between two brothers.
And my mom looks back and she said,
Abby, close your legs.
My brothers, their legs were wide open.
She said close your legs.
And I looked to my left and I looked to my right
and my brothers' legs were wide open.
And I was like, no,
that's uncomfortable. I have to like sit there in the middle seat with my inner thighs,
like squish together. I was like, no. And I just remembered that was a moment that I chose
myself over what my mom wanted this little girl to be doing. It blows my mind that that was the moment.
I feel it deeply that I was like, no.
And what I'm thinking is when you say,
when you're a kid, there's a moment
where you have to choose between the people you love
or the connection that you have and your body's needs,
I still feel that now.
I feel that all the time,
like my connection
to the people that I love, like my team, my wife,
my sister, my family is completely dependent
upon me not paying attention to my, I know that can't be true,
but this thing we're taught to constantly override
our exhaustion or our wishes or our desire to just stop and that the people around us,
I don't know that their love for us or our worthiness in their life is dependent on us not honoring
our bodies. Does anyone else feel like that? Can you give me an example? Work or being a mother or
the relentlessness of that? Like I don't know't know. I feel that what you just said, not as something in my past,
but as something in your present.
And I think we can look at is happening first in the past,
but existing in the present culture,
where that tends to be the currency of connection
for most of us, especially if you've been socialized
into womanhood.
The story about femininity often is disavow your own bodily
knowing as a way of creating comfort for other people. And so there's actually
phenomena and research in which women will put themselves down as a means of
making other women feel better, to feel like you can connect with other people,
right? That's taking the disconnection with yourself to that whole other level.
I'm actually going further self-silence
and actually kind of participate in my own oppression
to create a sense of belonging.
I would argue that for many of us,
that first moment that we experienced,
I mean, I can certainly speak for myself here.
One of those first moments of disavowing
our bodily knowing is when we experience caregiver giver distress. When we see our
parent upset and we say, Mom, are you sad? And our parent goes, Oh, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, I'm fine, I'm fine, right? And our body is so wired to be in tune with the feelings of
other people around us that we know,
right? We know when the people that we love are upset, but at some point that seed is planted
inside of us that says, don't trust that knowing that you have about how to be in connection with
other people. Don't trust that sense that your body is giving you, that you know when the people around you are feeling something.
And so we learn to begin self-silencing
as a means of saying, okay, well, I'm gonna trust you.
You must know better than I do.
You have the authority and what's happening inside of my body.
And slowly and surely we kind of hand those experiences over
not because we are doing anything wrong, but because
in our development, our ability to be in relationship with people who approve of us and love us and
meet our needs is so essential to our survival that we will 10 times out of 10 when we're not sure
about the connection, sacrifice what's happening inside of us to make sure that we are safe relationally. It is that important for our survival.
Wow.
And it feels like it's a self-perpetuating thing because if we get the science early,
either with holding a praise or the praising of us,
restricting or having, quote unquote, self-control by not doing the things that our body is telling us to do,
then we never do what our bodies
want to do and see that it is good and see that it works out well.
So we end up being grown people who have never followed down that path.
It's like Pandora's box.
You're telling me I should just eat whatever I want.
Oh my God, I will just eat the entire grocery store.
You're telling me to do what I want.
I'll sleep for the next three years.
We have no trust because we have no data
as to if we follow the wisdom of our body,
our whole lives won't implode.
And I think that for the most part
that is actually an exaggeration, right?
Because we won't sleep for three
years. And if we did eat everything in the grocery store, we would live on the other side of that,
and we would be okay, and we would find our way back into balance. Like, I don't think that those
things generally happen or that they're as scary as we think they are, but where that is actually
true is often entrometreatment. Because when we've dissociated from our body and we've not felt,
and entrometreatment. Because when we've dissociated from our body
and we've not felt, usually what happens first,
when we start to feel again, is we feel all of the things
that we could not feel before we had dissociated.
It's like we come out of dissociation,
the thing we came into it, which is through the bigness
of the body.
And I think what happens then is people go,
oh my gosh, here's all the terror that I never felt.
Here's all the fear.
Here's all the sensation that was too much for me before.
And so we pop back into dissociation
instead of realizing that when we keep feeling
and we stay with it, we get to the other side,
that's where that safety feeling is.
That's where the pieces that our body actually knows
how to homostatically self-correct. And we can get
out of the bigness and the overwhelmingness of it if we stay with the process. But if you come
back to where those ruptures were early, we can see that relationship is one of the things that we
need to do that. And many of us don't know how to let people into those scary places inside. We
don't know how to let people into what it's actually like to feel fear in our bodies and have them with us
as we're doing it, which is what makes
a sensation tolerable.
Can you say that again?
Many of us don't know how to allow ourselves
to be truly accompanied and attuned to
when we are experiencing an emotion as a bodily process.
tuned to when we are experiencing an emotion as a bodily process.
Do any of us know that and how are we supposed to do that? Yeah.
Like, can I just give an example of this?
Okay.
During early recovery this last time, the way I described it, Hillary, is that if you
drink that syrup stuff that lit up, what is it?
The radius contrast.
Mine would have only been in the brain. You wouldn't have seen my awareness anywhere else. that if you drink that syrup stuff that lit up, what is it? The radiance? Contrast. Contrast.
Mine would have only been in the brain.
You wouldn't have seen my awareness anywhere else.
So that's how I thought of it.
Dropping down during recovery, I had a moment where I was in my body and with my people,
with Abby and a couple of friends, and I had no idea.
It was so terrifying.
I didn't know how to go to my story
about what was happening in my brain.
So I just had to sit there and say things like,
I feel scared, but like our trauma and our memories
are in our body correct.
Is that what you're saying?
When we start to become embodied,
we leave the safe place of our mind.
Sink into our body and inside of our body
is all kinds of memory and stored trauma.
That's why we avoid it.
It's not a bad idea.
You're right. It works until it doesn't.
It works.
And maybe I'll just say it really explicitly.
God bless our dissociation.
I am so grateful for every single moment that I shut sensation out of my body because I
needed that to survive.
I needed that.
Thank you for say that. It was the most important thing I could have done
at that time. It was everything that kept me alive. And so, like, bless my dissociation. Thank you
mind for being a safe place to exist in to where I could escape out of the terror of feeling what it was like to be me.
But it is so important that we understand our dissociative processes as part of our survival
response. And at some point, we get to update our systems and say, I'm not in the moment that needs to be white, knuckled, and survived
in the same way. I am with people who love me, who want to help me meet my needs, and
it is okay for me to be seen in the fullness of what that means now.
And the reason for it, I can tell you my two little reasons. And then you tell me the
real reasons that we should be embody. Okay. A couple of
mine where I figured out at one moment that I was never loving anyone. Like I couldn't really love
my kids or Abby, meaning I am sitting on a couch usually. I am always in my mind. My mind cannot touch them.
They cannot touch my mind.
I am gone in here.
I will never know their mind.
They will never truly know mine.
The only way that I can literally love my people
and truly be with them is with my hands
and with my arms and with their head on my shoulder.
Our bodies are how we love each other.
And then the other thing is, if the only way to be alive is to be in the moment, I was
never alive because in my mind, I am always in the past or I'm always in the future.
I'm always ruminating about something that just happened or planning for something that's about to happen. That's how I live.
My hands and feet don't know how to be in the past or the future.
They are always, always and have always forever more been and will always be in right now.
So the only way that I can be fully present is to get back into my hands and legs and feet
because they are always now.
Yeah, you said it perfectly.
The body is a terrifying place to be
because the body is also where it illnesses,
it's where death is, it is where oppression and power and disempowerment is,
it is where suffering and aloneness and judgment,
right, objectification of our bodies can be,
and our bodies are now, right?
They're now, and if now is not a place I wanna be,
right, like we talked about earlier,
if there's danger around,
it's hard to be in a body, but the body is also,
where our liveness is.
It is where pleasure is.
I have never had an orgasm except anywhere in my body.
Like this is our sensuality,
our sense of interconnectedness.
I could even argue our ability to feel joy.
When I am feeling the most alive I've ever felt,
my arms spontaneously do this, right?
I thought, all of our is too really, yeah.
You're right.
You've seen a person in the airport
who's greeting someone they love
that they haven't seen in a while.
There is no way that anything is happening inside their body
except like, right, like this hugeness of expression is our body communicating
what it is like to be asked and what we want and what we long for. And so when here is
somewhere we really want to be, our body is the doorway into being here. But I don't want
to give that version of the story without also the other,
because it's right now is hard sometimes. Now is painful sometimes. Now includes feeling
the grief and the losses and the suffering and the fear of life. But the interesting thing
is that when we get that back, we also get the other side of it back. When we get the
discomfort, ugh, there's sensation in the adult like this,
ugh, oh my gosh, right.
Being him is so uncomfortable right now.
We also get the like, yes, right?
That comes along with being like,
oh, it's good to be me today.
What a beautiful moment to be in.
It's the whole ball game, right?
Like you're playing the whole ball game.
It's gonna be real bad sometimes.
It's gonna be real good.
I think of it like if life is like this huge,
just huge mansion and it has these rooms
playing scary movies and it's got these gorgeous
palace ballroom and it's got whatever.
And then we're just live our whole damn lives in the attic
and it's like it's fine there.
And say if there's nothing bad's gonna happen to you,
but you haven't explored any of the palettes.
That's how I fizz.
Feel like I spent most of my life.
I'm like, that is fine.
Look around.
There's a book or two.
We'll just stay up here.
But it's not actually the whole spectrum of what is possible.
Yes.
And it feels important to say here that embodiment
is not just for us as individuals.
Right, I think that there's something about embodying when we first access it.
We're like, ooh, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, me, which is a really good entry point into it to be like,
where have I been? Oh my gosh, I'm here.
I exist.
I think there can almost be like a kind of psychedelic quality to becoming a body for the first time again in our adult life and go like
Taste color space pleasure connection emotion all of it is so so much
But oh my gosh, I can do it. I can do it
And I think embodiment taken to its natural conclusion brings us deeper into connection with each other
because it is a motion that allows us to do empathy.
Empathy is not perspective-taking when we look at what empathy actually is.
Empirically, empathy is my body intuitively responding with adaptive action tendency to
your feeling in a way that brings us into right relationship.
Empathy is my body's ability to go, oh, spontaneously, you're sad.
I'm going to move towards you.
And I think that that is something that we need to do justice work in a way that
does not burn us out because it will always burn us out to do the run around
from, I'm going to think about what you need to try to access some feeling and pull up the energy.
But I'm also really tired because I'm neglecting my needs.
And then I'm going to put that output into the world is something that looks really good
for you, but actually, embodiment takes us into a kind of sustainable caring that brings
us into right relationship with people around us and helps us know how to do boundaries.
I mean, anger is the quality that is under boundaries.
So for many of us who have a hard time with boundaries,
we actually probably don't know how to feel anger in our body.
An anger is not violence or destruction or oppression.
Anger is a little bit of heat usually in our chest and jaw and hands.
It's literally just nerve activation,
nervous system response, and it is because of that anger that we get a sense of
clarity about what what doesn't hurt for us, what we need to do.
For people listening, you might have an embodied response to a person in your life that feels a little bit like a prickle of anger.
That person is crossing my boundary.
I don't like this.
I don't feel safe with this person.
And you're having an embodied response and then you will quickly, if you're me,
you will quickly go disembodied from that,
which means you will go right back to your mind
and your mind will say, no, no, no,
that person has shown up for you several times.
No, you should not feel this way.
No, no, no, no.
That's the difference between an embodied response.
No, I don't feel good.
I don't feel safe.
That's a good information. But then if you don't listen to your embodiment, and I don't know,. I don't feel safe. That's good information.
But then if you don't listen to your embodiment,
and I don't know if I'm saying this right,
but then you jump to back to your mind, right?
And your mind talks you out
of all of the good information your embodiment just gave you.
Yeah, maybe a way of saying it is that we have these
kind of neural loops in which our expectation
of what happens
relationally in response to us listening to ourselves gets triggered,
that's a kind of body memory in a way of like,
when in the past, this is what comes to mind,
when in the past did I learn that it would cost me connection
to listen to myself, that I would somehow be less valuable,
or I would hurt someone.
And so our body learns how really quickly to replay that memory of, oh, I'm going to hurt someone again if I listen to this.
So it's going to cost me something. And it is that kind of step-wise sequence of the memory of
what we learned to do a long time ago, playing out in the present moment as we inhibit what we know
to be true as a means of doing what we're supposed to do.
That sounds right.
I have a question about, you know, managing, we get into our bodies.
We have good experiences, good emotions. We've got tougher emotions.
How do we get more comfortable with the fear that comes up in the body?
I think because as an athlete, I am trained to overcome it sometimes to a fault where I'm like,
oh, this is not something to be afraid of. And sometimes I, in my life, have taken bigger risks
than I should have or maybe I am actually disembodied. I'm getting into a disembodied state
where I'm mining over a matter.
So when the harder feelings come up,
how do we manage those and remember, okay,
this is not forever,
what are some exercises or tools that you have
for people out there who might want to feel the feelings,
but are terrifying.
Yeah.
I think it's really hard to begin that process at all if
we don't make space because we can be really quick to distract ourselves and move into what we might
call our defenses, our ways of intellectualizing or ignoring or kind of numbing out or deferring
responsibility to somebody else. We don't even make space around that sensation that we encountered.
So first noticing sensation and creating a little bit of space, maybe saying,
there's something here, I'm just going to check this out for a moment.
And I often like to allow myself to take a breath and imagine that I'm breathing
into that sensation and ask the sensation, is there something you want me to know?
So, Hillary, you're talking about if you get like a tightness in your chest or a signal. A body signal. Yeah. And emotion
is, right, we think about as energy and motion. It's a somatic process. Emotion is not just
the word that we give to it, but it is actually our body communicating with energy and temperature
and impulse, what it is that needs to happen next. So if we can start to slow down in our lives in general, then we're more likely to catch
those sensations.
But when we catch those sensations, it can be a really good for a step to just imagine
padding that with a little bit of space and curiosity.
What is it that's there?
What is that called?
What does it want for me?
And I think that I have a practice similar to what you're saying,
Abby, of being like, this needs to go away.
Maybe that's not what you're saying.
No, it is.
I'm not feeling, yeah, yeah, I'm not feeling fear.
Like, oh, I don't need that right now.
Like, that doesn't have to be here.
And so it has been really helpful for me
on the road of reclaiming the fullness
of my emotional experience to invite things along with me.
Imagining that there is a wise me who can move forward and make that choice to do the whatever the thing is, but there is also another version of me who is actually quite afraid and she gets to
come along. And I am not going to disavow her. This is a very important part of my inner work right
now is to say, there is a me who knows I want to make this choice.
And there is also a me, likely a younger me who doesn't know that this is safe and that
I'm going to be okay, who is protesting and is saying, I am terrified.
And in the past, what I would have done is say, I'm going to lock all of those parts.
All of you get locked in a closet and you get to come out later.
Maybe sometime in therapy,
right? Maybe if I'm around someone that I like, maybe accidentally if you bust through the door,
but you're going to be locked in there for the most part. And what I have started to say is, okay,
fear. Younger, younger me. You can come along. You can come along and you can see that you're safe with me.
And you can be here as long as you need to be here.
And I'm not.
I'm not going to send you away.
And I'm not going to tell you that you're bad.
I promise you.
And it is okay if you're afraid.
I'll be with you as you feel that.
And how do you know when it's a time to bring sweet little scared Hillary along but go anyway?
And when it's something that you actually shouldn't do because sweet little scared Hillary
is exactly right.
How do you know?
Yeah.
Yeah. I mean, wouldn't that you know? Yeah. Yeah.
I mean, wouldn't that be nice?
No.
Right?
I was like, you know, waiting for her to tell me you're here.
I think what's interesting about the process of seeing sweet little Hillary can come along
is that I also believe that angry Hillary is allowed to be there on the other side
if I did make the wrong choice. And sad Hillary is allowed to be there on the other side
if I'm hurt about what happened. And so the goal of being in relationship with my fear
is not that I do everything perfectly from now on, but that I am in relationship with myself
and I make space for the experience that I'm having about what it's like to be me,
including, I think this is the right choice.
And I'm gonna give it my very best.
And I'm not sure, and I probably won't know till later,
which is if we face it, most of our adult choices.
Yes.
Like, okay, I'm gonna weigh the cost benefits of this,
and they pretty much come out even
so I'm just gonna take a step in a direction
because I just wanna live my life, right? Like something needs to happen. And then if we've built
this relationship with our emotion, with our sensing selves, and we have some capacity to tolerate
that, I know that whatever happens on the other side, I'll be okay with that, because I'm not gonna send my grief away
if it was the wrong choice.
I'm so grateful for how you talk about this,
because I feel like it sometimes,
when people talk about just everybody get embodied,
that there's not a lot of talk about how then,
I love my community, and I don't like just being like
yeah just getting your body it's actually really difficult. I believe it's worth every bit that it's
that it's we always say the idea of beautiful like it's brutal but it's beautiful and you just get
both and that's what living in the body is. But there's trauma there and there's hard stuff
and we have to help people figure out how to navigate being a body.
Yes.
Let me tell you a story that feels particularly relevant to Mary-Nah.
Because I'm a new mom. I got a sweet little baby at home.
And so I'm learning all of these things through that lens of trying to give her right experiences
of being in her body and trying really hard
to not have those relational ruptures
where she feels like, oh, I have to believe mom
at the expense of myself.
Like I want her to be able to feel like she can have both.
And where that all really, you know,
the rubber really met the road with that was,
she has hated being in the car seat, loved
it since she was born, just screaming, right?
And you're like, okay, the solution is obviously I'd never drive anywhere.
This is the race with the response, right?
I'm clearly dysregulated driving and I have a wild history of nearly lethal car accidents. And so I'm
like just having a hard time being in the car anyway. And then I got my baby screaming
in the back and everything in my body is saying it is not safe. It is not safe. It is not
safe. It is not safe. For all of these reasons, meanwhile, I haven't left the driveway.
It is actually safe because I'm sitting in front of my house, buckled up the cars.on. So sometimes we have this awareness of like,
oh, I'm in my driveway.
We get a glimpse of divine insight
and we realize, okay, right, the car isn't started.
I'm okay, but I remember this one drive
that I was taking with her and my history up into that point
had been like, okay, we're gonna take short drives
and probably someone in the backseat to reassure her
and I'm just gonna be singing to her
and talking to her the whole way.
And I was on this drive with her
and she was screaming and then she stopped.
And yes, your face, Glennon, exactly.
I, all of a sudden, realized that that actually felt more scary
than when she was telling me that she was in distress.
And I said to her through tears in my eyes, don't ever stop telling me when you're upset.
Don't ever stop telling me. Don't ever stop screaming if you don't like something,
tell me you don't like it. Tell me as long as you need to that you don't like it.
And I promise you, I will deal with my feelings about that.
That's it.
Oh, that's it.
That to me is like how I wanna be with myself too, right?
Like that's for her, but that's for me.
To say, fear, it's okay, tell me as long as you need to.
Don't stop, don't stop.
Right, you don't like something, tell me.
And I will be with you if we do it anyway.
And I'll be like, I know you hate this, right?
This is like how this translates to my relationship
and my daughter is like, oh, you don't wanna have a bath tonight.
Yeah, tell me as I'm like shampooing her hair.
Tell me how much you don't like this, right?
Because we still must do some dancing.
You're telling me.
Yeah.
We don't necessarily stop living our lives
or stop doing things,
but we say you don't have to stop communicating.
But Hillary, is it that one?
What's at the center of all of this?
Because the body, the body is a disruptor of patriarchy,
the body, the body is a disruptor of patriarchy, of capitalism, of ableism, all of transphobia, everything. The body is what says, no, to all of that, it interrupts
every system that people count on to keep the systems going. So every perversion of humanity is disruptive
by the existence of humanity, which is your body.
Right.
And our families, I mean, we learn not their evil parents
through parents who, you know, told us no pain, no gain,
like mind over matter, all the things that we learned
were an honor, a badge of honor.
Because those things have to be a badge of honor
in our culture, because we need people to ignore what they need so that they will keep being robots.
That's it.
You know, when you were saying that about your daughter, the like most extreme version of that,
I've worked in orphanages before and there when they babies get there, they cry and cry
and cry and then they stop crying because they know that no one is coming.
That it's fruitless, that their needs are not going to get met. So the only reason you cry
is to try to get your needs met. And that is the saddest thing about growing up with a kind of microcosm of that because there's a general
just surrender. I feel like a lot of women feel a little bit of stuff. It just like it feels like
it doesn't matter. No one cares how tired I am. No one wants me to stop because I'm meeting all of their needs. It doesn't matter who I say anything to because no one's coming to save me.
So I'll just stop listening to my body.
Which is, I mean, as a psychologist, we can start getting into mental health presentations
and look at the diagnostic labels we put on that.
That is the actual nervous system response
that causes depression.
Our bodies saying, it's too hard to keep trying, give up.
Give up, stop engaging with the world.
And it is our bodies communicate not necessarily
that we are bad, but we live in a culture
that is not exactly supporting
every single body to feel safe and like it is okay to be in the world. And so our bodies,
again, thank goodness that they know how to do this. At some point, give up. We call that
learned helplessness at times. This is the whole research phenomena. You can actually see how
it happens to animals and experiments
That our bodies at some point go, okay, I'm not gonna be heard
Just just give up and this is what I mean about what I said earlier about
You know when we come back into our body and all of a sudden the conditions are met in which okay
Maybe I don't have to give up anymore. Maybe I've got people around me
We might start screaming again.
Think about the baby. If you were to actually reverse that autonomic process from the shutdown
into engagement again, you touch what you felt right before you shut down. And that is really,
really hard to be with. To be in the not knowing is someone going to come, am I overwhelmed?
The terror, the intensity of sensation, that is no joke. And the world and the families and partners
reward you for keeping that shut off. Because when it turns back on, it's no fun for any damn body.
on, it's no fun for any damn body. No, they're like, you want to be in body?
Aren't you supposed to be dancing?
Why are you crying and yelling?
Yeah.
So I have two questions.
When people do start experimenting with getting out of their heads and back into their bodies,
is it possible to do without therapy?
Because if there's a bunch of trauma there for all of us, is it even safe to do without
therapy? And then for people listening right now, who might not have therapy, like what
are some ways that people can experiment with embodiment without crashing?
Mm-hmm. Okay. I'll betray my discipline as I say this, but I think that psychology has perpetuated disembodiment.
I think that the paradigm of understanding the mind
as the problem that needs to be fixed
by another person who has more information,
this is one of our gateways to mass disembodiment.
Wow.
Whoa.
We in the discipline of psychology didn't even start talking about the body.
You know, not that long ago, right? The emergence of somatic psychotherapy and censoring
motor processing came out of trauma studies because essentially people's bodies were saying your thought record, your way of
thought switching and stopping is not getting rid of my shell shock.
Exactly.
It is not getting rid of the sense that I am in danger all the time.
So we have to also take that one step further and see that most of psychology is inherited from an extremely
Androcentric patriarchal white Western European way of understanding the self.
I have to remind myself in these moments of Audrey Lord's famous quote,
you cannot dismantle the master's house using the master's tools. So what I
can tell you about embodiment and therapy
is that the black church has been doing embodiment way better than psychotherapy ever will.
Indigenous, sweat lodge and circle, community movement, right. Embodiment has been happening
all around us all the time. But the further we are indoctrinated into whiteness
and Androcentrism and patriarchy and cerebral reality,
the more we have had to leave our body
as a means of proving our goodness,
the further away from disembodiment
we feel like we are.
But it is around us all the time.
And it feels so important as a tool of liberation to give embodiment back to
us by saying, it is not owned by therapists. In fact, therapists, I'm sorry therapists out there,
we're not the best at it, right? We have bought into the idea that we are in our minds maybe more
than anybody else. So what I want to say is listen to yourself when you were tired.
When you were thirsty, I've just started keeping a glass of water on my desk because, and
this is introcept of awareness, this is a cornerstone of embodiment, when I notice I'm
thirsty, that is me being embodied in a positive way.
That's kind of a tuned connection to myself.
When I have a sense of sitting at my desk and realizing, whoa, I have been hunched
over like a ghoul, my loving partner reminds me that you can tell when I am kind of misattuned
to myself because I assemble a kind of gargoyle posture on my laptop keys, which is not how
my body was designed to be like this. So am I posseing to notice that it's good for me to stretch and move?
What are the places where I feel mastery in my body and where I can experience myself as
powerful?
Can I do those more?
Is there an activity that I do that I notice I feel better after?
What is that thing that I do that makes me feel better after? And I think, again,
as I mentioned, this kind of the way that embodiment takes us into connection with everything,
is that I think when we start slowing down, as you said, we disrupt capitalism, we disrupt
hassle culture, right? We start to all of a sudden go like, oh, that's not sustainable
for me anymore. But I noticed that when I slow down, I'm noticing that the seasons are changing.
Like legitimately, I did not ever see a bulb bloom for decades because I wasn't looking.
I wasn't here.
And I feel like I'm actually seeing daffodils come up in my garden.
And what it's doing is making me feel connected to the earth.
And the more I'm connected to the earth,
the more that I want to be in relationship with the earth.
And the more that I want to tend the soil,
and the more that I want to understand
the history of the land that I'm on.
And I think it takes us into a kind of mystical oneness
if we take it to its full extent.
Like embodiment actually brings us into relationship
with all life because it's life that is our bodies.
And when we start to encounter that,
we start to see it everywhere.
Hmm. I sometimes think that just engaging senses for me is really helpful.
Sometimes I can't remember the daffodils because it's just too hard, but I can lay a
scent that reminds me.
Anything that can bring me back to senses, a something that's soft, something that smells
good, some of the taste.
I mean, food has been huge in the embodiment journey, but are those tips that you offer
people?
Yeah, I mean, senses are one of the most easily accessible ways for us to access pleasure.
And so what I would say to elevate that exercise is do something through your senses. Anything that,
you know, the tactile, the sensations on your fingertips that feel really good
But the way to take it further is to notice and what happens inside of me when I touch that like oh that feels good or even
Effective action of being like I want to light that candle. God damn it. I'm gonna light that candle right and we do it
And we're like I don't have power over much of my life
But I'm letting this candle and then we do it. We notice like oh, what is agency?
Feel like my spine straightens a little bit more. I feel a sense of,
you know, oh, I could just take a deep breath. Right. So when we take those experiences that are
sensory that help us extraocept, right, connect with the world around us, we talked about
interocepting. We notice what's happening in the world around us, but then we bring it inside
and we stay with it. And we stay with it. We realize that our body is a place not just
of challenge and overwhelm, but also, like, vitality, pleasure, joy, aliveness. That's
there, too. And it doesn't, like you said, Glen, it does not have to look like sexy twerking or a kind of
indication. Yeah, but I think, but I think I could also really
interesting what you just said is that it's not just about the sense of smell.
What you just said is I had the agency. I had the desire. I had this thing
happening and it's not just like one response, it's not helping you in one way.
There's all of these things that are really important about it.
It's nobility.
What I hear you saying and what I feel every time I'm doing one of these little
returning to embodiment through my therapy is it's the opposite of ignoring yourself
when we've learned discipline, which is to override the self's messages, to override, to ignore, like that is honorable. But when you
actually start to listen and honor yourself, even if it's, I want to light this
candle, this magical thing happens. And for me, the magical thing is a
nobility, a regality. It's like putting on a crown is the only way that I can think of it.
It's very honoring of self, which is a returning of nobility.
Because in lighting a candle, there's these micro things that happen that are revolutionary
that we don't activate anywhere else in our life. There's, I have the self-knowledge
to know. I would feel better if there was a candlelit.
Then the I had the audacity to do the damn thing.
That the only reason to do it is because it's going to make me feel better.
And then I did it and I feel better.
And it's all because I did that cycle.
But when you think about it, we don't do that anywhere in our lives.
That's why it's so emotional.
We don't slow down enough to notice all of those pieces of convention, but I think that
it is so important that we recognize that that wanting came from somewhere inside of us,
right?
That that also has an interoceptive quality to it.
What told me that I wanted to light the candle? You could really like pinch
to zoom with that and find that that connects with a little sense of impulse or sensation inside.
And when you start to know what that looks and feels and sounds like inside of you, then you start to recognize it with bigger things.
That wanting has a quality to it,
that we can start to actually build a relationship with.
It reminds me of the Audrey Lorde,
I mean, to bring her up again how she says that it's all on the spectrum of the erotic.
Like the reason why that little candle is so huge is that it is the same acknowledgement of one inside and she says,
the erotic is a force which moves us toward living in a fundamental way. So that is living
the lighting of the candle and it's on the same road that is realizing the full extent of your desires with your partner and your sexual life force.
Exactly.
There's a few categories, right?
I didn't, I got so excited about answering this question.
I didn't add these pieces in,
but when we look into the empirical research about embodiment,
we see that there are a few different domains
that help us access embodiment,
and we could add therapy into one of these. But again,
this is about being human, right? This is not something that only people who have masters or
doctoral degrees can do. Or candles. Or candles.
Have permission to help you get access to. This is our humanness. This is our birthright. So there
are many, many entry points and you do not have to pay for most of them.
So the first thing that we see in the research
about embodiment is something called the mental domain.
And this comes out of Niva Perans' work.
She's a scholar who's dedicated decades
and decades and decades of her life
to researching embodiment as an empirical thing.
We can study how we get there, how we get away from there,
and what she's found in her research is that the mental domain can be something that's constricting or liberating.
We like to think about embodiment in terms of the sensory qualities, but our body is our mind,
right, there actually is no distinction. And so it is super important to recognize that our thinking
And so it is super important to recognize that our thinking about our bodies and other bodies shapes our experience of being a body.
So are we perpetuating these kind of constricting, corseting narratives?
Or are we engaging in a critical stance towards social discourse?
Are we mentally able to say, I'm not going to play that game anymore?
Or whoa, like that's not an okay
narrative to pass on about a body. Whatever it is that we want to say, can we mentally
free ourselves? And even if that's the only place that you can start, that actually counts
because your mind is your body. The second piece is we've got the kind of the social power
piece. Many of us experience our bodies depending on our intersecting identities as places where we are
devalued, but also there is something in our body that we experience that could connect us to a
source of power. And where are the places, even if primarily we identify in our bodies through the
angle of how we have had power taken from us, how we've been oppressed, who are the other people
who know about that experience?
So even if I can't change anything about their lived reality in my body, when we are in
social contexts with others who understand that, that does something to our bodies.
And the last domain is the physical domain, which is where we tend to think most about
embodiment because it's the most kind of obvious in a way, but we can access
positive embodiment through physical freedom. And really what that means is experimenting with
agency and movement, experiencing safety, attuned care, noticing, slowing down, paying attention,
connection with desire. Right, that actually in the empirical research shows up as a pathway into embodiment is noticing desire
and honoring it and listening to it.
So you can do that through any number of things,
the simple things day to day,
but also maybe through bigger experiences,
like what has my body not been allowed to do?
What have I been told by society I can't do?
And what would it be like to do that?
I'm just thinking back to your story of resistance, Abby.
Of no, I'm going to keep my legs open
because where else are my knees gonna go?
Like what?
This is it?
I have to take up space here,
but we can do adult versions of that.
I as simple as like, oh, I'm supposed to be sitting
in a meeting all day.
Maybe I'm gonna stand.
Like maybe I often do this when I'm lect as like, oh, I'm supposed to be sitting in a meeting all day, maybe I'm gonna stand.
Like maybe I often do this when I'm lecturing like,
oh, my back is not feeling good.
A lot of my students know we're gonna take a stretch break
because even though I'm supposed to be
in this performative role of the lecture,
it feels really good to lecture
from a place that being connected to myself.
So I'm gonna disobey in a way.
I'm gonna be in a body in a way. I'm going to be in a body
in the academy. Yeah. Wow. So good. Hillary, you're a dream. And I'm so grateful for your work.
I'm so moved by how you're mothering your little one. I'm going to think about that forever.
And you all get Hillary's book, Wisdom of Your Body. And what I do appreciate about your work is that it actually gives exercises on how to make the embodiment real.
So it's not just words in a book.
Thank you for your work.
Keep going, please.
We need you and Pod Squad.
Brilliant.
Really?
Get in that body.
Get in that body Pod Squad.
But just for a quick moment, because it's dangerous in there.
We can't do a smart thing.
It's not dangerous in there, it's dangerous out there.
Right, that's good.
It just, it gets worse before it gets better.
It gets real good.
It's a lot, it's a lot of information.
It's a lot of information.
It's a lot of information.
It's a lot of information.
You don't have to pay attention to all of it, all at once.
You can hear a little bit and you can pop back out and you can pop back in when you're ready. I just look good
Thank you. Wonderful. Thank you. You are wonderful
Damn international treasurer is what you are. See you next time. Bye. It's quiet
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We can do hard things,
is produced in partnership with Keynes 13 Studios.
I give you Tish Melton and Brandy Carlyle.
I walked through a fire I came out the other side
I chased, desire, I'm the one for me
And because I'm mine, I want the line Cause we're adventurous and hard-braised on map
A final destination that we stopped asking directions
Some places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known We'll finally find our way back home
Through the joy and pain That our lives bring
We can do a heartache
I hit rock bottom, it felt like a brand new star
I'm not the problem sometimes things fall apart
And I continue to believe the best people are free And it took some time, but I'm finally fine
Cause we're adventurers in heartbreak
Some man, a final destination with that
We stopped asking directions
So places they've never been
And to be loved we need to be known
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain
That our lives bring
We can do hard This world finished her rose and heart breaks on land.
We might get lost but we're only left.
Stopped asking directions
Some places may have never been
And to be loved we need to be loved
We'll finally find our way back home
And through the joy and pain that our lives bring
We can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things
Yeah, we can do hard things We can all be